词汇 | embrace |
释义 | embrace verb uk /ɪmˈbreɪs/ us /ɪmˈbreɪs/ embraceverb (ACCEPT)C1[ T ]formal to accept something enthusiastically: 欣然接受;乐意采纳 This was an opportunity that he would embrace.这样的机会他是求之不得的。 to accept or continue in a situation that is difficult or unpleasant bearI will bear the responsibility for whatever happens. endureShe endured years of hip pain before seeing a surgeon. sufferShe suffers from severe asthma. acceptI have finally accepted that I can't change who he is. resign yourself toI have resigned myself to the fact that I'll never work again. become resigned toPeople have become resigned to the fact that increased security means much longer wait times at airports. We are always eager to embrace the latest technology. Corporate America quickly embraced the Web as a new vehicle for advertising. This was in the days before she embraced religion. After meeting Claude Monet in 1887 he embraced and promoted the Impressionist style. Dole has long embraced the concept. Accepting & agreeing accepting accommodation accreditation agree to something agree with something assent compact conclusion countenance currency formal pre-approved presumed consent ratification ratify re-establish regrant root signatory unquestioning embraceverb (HOLD)C2[ I or T ]literary to hold someone tightly with both arms to express love, liking, or sympathy, or when greeting or leaving someone: 抱,拥抱 She saw them embrace on the station platform.她看到他们在站台上拥抱。 He leaned over to embrace the child.他弯腰去拥抱那个孩子。 to hold someone or something holdCan you hold this for a moment? claspHe reached out to clasp her hand. gripThe baby gripped my finger with her tiny hand. clutchSilent and pale, she clutched her mother's hand. clingOne little girl was clinging onto a cuddly toy. hang onThe child was hanging on to her mother's skirt. Showing affection affectionate affectionately aw bear hug canoodle chuck cwtch cwtch up to someone demonstratively demonstrativeness embracingly love bomb love bombing make something/someone out man hug mwah smack spoon squeeze tactile embraceverb (INCLUDE)C1[ T ]formal to include something, often as one of a number of things: 包括,包含 Linguistics embraces a diverse range of subjects such as phonetics and stylistics.语言学包括一系列不同的科目,如语音学和文体学。 Including and containing absorptive capacity accessibly all in assimilable assimilate carry drag draw draw someone into something EDI EDIB embody embracingly incorporation involve number someone/something among someone/something O, o pack something in plug seat embrace noun[ C ] uk /ɪmˈbreɪs/ us /ɪmˈbreɪs/ C2 the act of holding someone tightly with both arms to express love, liking, or sympathy, or when greeting or leaving someone: 抱,拥抱 She greeted me with a warm embrace.她用热烈的拥抱迎接我。 PhotoAlto/Odilon Dimier/Brand X Pictures/GettyImages Showing affection affectionate affectionately aw bear hug canoodle chuck cwtch cwtch up to someone demonstratively demonstrativeness embracingly love bomb love bombing make something/someone out man hug mwah smack spoon squeeze tactile embrace | American Dictionaryembrace verb us/ɪmˈbreɪs/ embraceverb (HOLD)[ I/T ] to hold someone close to you with your arms to express affection, love, or sympathy, or when greeting or leaving someone: [ I/T ]They embraced (each other) before saying good-bye. embraceverb (ACCEPT)[ T ] to accept something with great interest or enthusiasm: He has wholeheartedly embraced life in south Louisiana. embracenoun[ C ]us/ɪmˈbreɪs/ They greeted each other with a warm embrace. Examples of embraceembrace Progressive local authorities, therefore, embraced the emergent technology of destructors and thereby wed municipal waste management to large-scale and cost-ineffective waste disposal schemes. Increased transfers were quickly accepted as inevitable, and within a few years embraced as desirable. When the issue is discussed, it usually embraces one of two debates, or a combination of both. The authors conclude that it is somewhat premature to embrace the assumption of a parallel activation of the bilingual's two languages. However, the extent to which this link was popularly embraced is still a matter of debate. Not all readers will embrace every viewpoint expressed in this book. Casting aside figurative painting, the visual artists tended to embrace installation art and irony. Shysters embrace the extraordinary and translate it into their reality. By the end of his terrible journey, he embraces the whole 'divine circle' of creation, affirming transcendence rather than mortality. It is a clear instance of 'affirmative deformation', embracing a convention (here the lyricform aria) all the more strongly by keeping its normative realisation silent. The courts later adopted a less restrictive concept of locality, recognising that settlements might embrace more than one parish. For obvious reasons, his position is not generally publicly embraced by those with a more ambitious agenda for traditional approaches. It specifically examines new patterns of inequality and exclusion and ends by arguing that the choice we face is between fearing difference or embracing diversity. In some cases, however, existing unions were brought to embrace syndicalism; in others dissidents broke away to found their own syndicalist unions. The spiral stair-tower is enfolded by these forms, like an infant in the protective embrace of its parents. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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